Canada’s Loonie Gets NAFTA Lift

 | Mar 21, 2018 07:03AM ET

Wednesday March 21: Five things the markets are talking about

Global equities have traded mixed overnight despite the U.S dollar operating under pressure as the market waits for the Federal Reserve’s first policy decision since Jerome Powell took the wheel. Treasuries prices have rallied and oil has touched a six-week high.

At 02:00 pm ETD the market will tune in to Jerome Powell’s first Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting as chairman, with close scrutiny of whether monetary policy might become more “hawkish” under his tenure. Also of interest will be the future guidance given by him during his scheduled press conference (02:30 am EDT).

Recent U.S data and Fed speeches would suggest the median of FOMC participants’ assessment of the appropriate pace of policy firming (the dots) will unite around +2.125% or three hikes for 2018, with an outside risk the median dot will move to +2.375%.

Elsewhere, the Bank of England (BoE) is expected to keep interest rates and its asset-purchase program unchanged tomorrow (8:00 am EDT). Attention will be on language and the odds for a May hike.

Also, down-under, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand (RBNZ) has a monetary policy decision today at 04:00 pm EDT.

h3 1. Stocks: Mixed Results /h3

In Japan, many investors have stayed on the sidelines ahead of today’s Japanese public holiday and the two-day Fed meeting expected to produce a rate hike.

Down-under, Australia’s ASX closed +0.2% higher, while indexes in Indonesia and India rose by +1% and +0.7%, respectively. In New Zealand, the main benchmark closed +1.4% higher at a record high.

In Hong Kong, stocks were little changed overnight, as the market braces itself for Fed Chair Powell’s first policy meeting and amid concerns that President Trump could impose additional punitive trade measures against China. The Hang Seng index rose +0.1%, while the China Enterprises Index lost -0.5%.

In China, stocks erased early gains and ended lower, weighed down by start-up firms, as investors booked profits mostly in the tech sector. At the close, the Shanghai Composite index was down -0.3%, while the blue-chip CSI 300 index was down -0.38%.

In Europe, regional indices trade mostly lower across the board led by the FTSE 100, which trades lower on a stronger pound (£1.4074) on the back of stronger jobs data (see below) out of the U.K.

U.S stock futures are pointing to a -0.1% fall for the S&P 500 and the Dow.

Indices: Stoxx600 -0.2% at 375.0, FTSE -0.5% at 7026, DAX -0.1% at 12298, CAC-40 -0.3% at 5235, IBEX-35 +0.1% at 9688, FTSE MIB +0.1% at 22829, SMI -0.2% at 8834, S&P 500 Futures -0.1%